10/22/2021

Women Still Can’t Have It All

after a few dates I will ghost him so he will wonder what he did wrong


 Have you ever met a woman you really liked, went on a few dates with her, and everything seemed to be going great until she suddenly disappeared a few weeks later?


Trouble meeting your own emotional needs can have a significant impact on your romantic relationships, and subconsciously, this can push away your dream woman.

When you're emotionally dependent,  you'll typically need a lot of reassurance and support from your partner.

Fellahs you might, for example, regularly ask things like:

"Do you really love me?"
"Am I bothering you?"
"Do you really want to spend time with me?"
"How do I look to you?"
"You don’t want to break up, do you?"

If you often experience feelings of insecurity or self-doubt, you might need their approval to feel good about yourself.

This need can trigger fears of what might happen if they leave or stop providing the reassurance you need.
  • Is She just interested in being a cock tease

The discovery that more men than women hold positions of power rarely comes as a surprise. What may be more unexpected is that things are not always as they seem when women appear to have equality.

Countries can sometimes stand out for their efforts at getting women into positions of power.

Take, for example, Rwanda's appointment of a cabinet in which half of the posts went to women. Its move came just days after a gender-balanced cabinet was named in Ethiopia.

Elsewhere in the world, there are many striking examples of women having equality with men, or even outperforming them, in other jobs that offer power and influence.

Walk into a courtroom in Slovenia and the judge is four times more likely to be a woman than a man. In journalism, Namibia stands out: half of its top newsroom posts are held by women.

It is not difficult to find other countries which buck the trend for a particular job. Half of IT professionals in Malaysia are female, along with six out of 10 medical researchers in New Zealand and five out of 10 engineers in Oman.

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